Hawaii 5-0
July 10, 2009 at 2:07 pm | In Travel | Leave a CommentMy fiancée and I are off to Hawaii this evening for two weeks. Neither of us have been there before so we are very excited. From what we hear it is a land of contrasts, where people get off the plane with a Surfboard under one arm, and Snowboard under the other.
Being a volcanic archipelago Hawaii has peaks as high as 4,200 meters, almost twice as high as Mt Kosciusko here in Australia. We are staying on three different islands over the fortnight, leaving our shopping in Honolulu until the last three days. I’m certain I will have some wonderful stories and photos to share with you all when I am back.
Indigenous Incarceration
July 10, 2009 at 1:52 pm | In Life Observations | Leave a CommentSome very alarming statistics were released this week. In NSW, Indigenous youths are 26 times more likely to be in juvenile detention than their non-Indigenous peers. Nationally it is even worse at 28 times.
I am a firm believer that we need better programs to reduce these rates. Clearly the system is failing.
Lost in Switzerland
July 7, 2009 at 11:47 am | In Life Observations, Switzerland, Travel | Leave a CommentSome of you of course know that my fiancée was born in Switzerland and has lived in Australia since 2000, and that all of her family still lives in Germany and Switzerland. During the past nine years we have had discussions on and off about going to work and live over there. In 2003 we made an attempt but I was offered a lucrative promotion at work and we decided to stay in Sydney.
My fiancée had been looking at Swiss roles casually for the past 12 months, and recently a great one came up. After a number of interviews and a whirlwind 38 hour visit to Zurich, she has been offered and has accepted the role. She starts on October 1st and we will be moving over there early September.
It will be another exciting chapter in our lives. Having worked in Darwin I have proven that I can survive being away from family and friends. If anything the past nine months were even more difficult given I was up there alone.
We have a whole bunch of travel planned between now and when we leave, starting with two weeks in Hawaii from this Friday. We head to NZ for two weeks in August and will probably end up somewhere in Europe in the weeks before she starts her new role. All in all this is a very exciting and somewhat scary time. My first two priorities will be learning to speak better German and finding a job. I can only be a kept man for so long it seems.
Busy Weekend
July 6, 2009 at 6:56 pm | In Life Observations, Sydney | Leave a CommentI have been back in Sydney for 4 days now and tonight is the first night we have not had something on. I surprised my fiancée last Thursday by having a chauffeur pick her up to take her to Café Sydney, arguably one of the best Restaurants in Australia. My brother was very kind and picked me up from the airport, dropped me at the Restaurant, then took all my 77kgs of luggage home for me. What a legend.
Friday night we met up with the ex-Westpac crowd for dinner at Vinothek, the new German wine bar in Darlinghurst. I invited a dozen people hoping that 5 or 6 could make it. To my surprise everyone came along except one friend who was travelling for work. We had a great night. A wonderful way to spend my first 24 hours back in Sydney.
On Saturday we took my mum to see the Wayne Scott Kermond musical Candy Man at the Theatre Royal. I actually enjoyed it more than I thought I would, even more than Buddy which we saw earlier in the year. The dancing was simply sensational.
Last night we had friends over for dinner which was another superb night. Great food, wine and conversation. How could we not have a great night.
And now I am waiting for my beloved to come home from work so we can go for a walk in the brisk night air. Very different to the 32 degrees I was baking in this time last week.
The Fishing Trip
July 3, 2009 at 3:40 pm | In Darwin, Darwin Observations, Sydney | Leave a CommentI landed back in Sydney last night after completing my final week in Darwin. I learnt an enormous amount in the 9 months that I spent up there. Not only about life in Darwin, but about the challenges faced in remote parts of our country, about life for our Indigenous, and a lot about myself.
I originally took on the contract for a number of reasons. I have had a keen interest in Indigenous affairs since reading my fiancée’s PhD on Indigenous Health. I was also excited about living in a new city for a while having lived and worked in Sydney my entire life.
Prior to taking this role I had spent the better part of 10 years working for a large bank so I was looking forward to working outside the corporate environment. I was even happier to be working for a not for profit (NFP) company.
I think I had some naïve views about what it would be like to work for an NFP. Given their missions are usually about altruism and community, I had thought that those who worked for them would embody this. Sadly, this was not always the case. Of course there are a number of people who’s career focus is about improving the lives of our Indigenous, but I would say that to the majority of people it is just a job. A lot of people wouldn’t have the faintest idea about the challenges Indigenous people face. I don’t profess to be an expert by any stretch of the imagination, but I did all I could to learn during the time I was here.
Having said all that, the people that do believe in the cause and understand what the mission is go a long way to making up for those who don’t. There are some truly passionate people, some of whom have been here since the very start. These are the people that the organisation needs to hang onto, and listen to, if they are going to succeed.
All in all I thoroughly enjoyed my time in Darwin. I will miss the weather, the relaxed way of life and the fact that you can wear your thongs anywhere. Most importantly I will miss the geckos.
Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.